990 resultados para Direction Attractive Forces
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Back-focal-plane interferometry is used to measure displacements of optically trapped samples with very high spatial and temporal resolution. However, the technique is closely related to a method that measures the rate of change in light momentum. It has long been known that displacements of the interference pattern at the back focal plane may be used to track the optical force directly, provided that a considerable fraction of the light is effectively monitored. Nonetheless, the practical application of this idea has been limited to counter-propagating, low-aperture beams where the accurate momentum measurements are possible. Here, we experimentally show that the connection can be extended to single-beam optical traps. In particular, we show that, in a gradient trap, the calibration product κ·β (where κ is the trap stiffness and 1/β is the position sensitivity) corresponds to the factor that converts detector signals into momentum changes; this factor is uniquely determined by three construction features of the detection instrument and does not depend, therefore, on the specific conditions of the experiment. Then, we find that force measurements obtained from back-focal-plane displacements are in practice not restricted to a linear relationship with position and hence they can be extended outside that regime. Finally, and more importantly, we show that these properties are still recognizable even when the system is not fully optimized for light collection. These results should enable a more general use of back-focal-plane interferometry whenever the ultimate goal is the measurement of the forces exerted by an optical trap.
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Back-focal-plane interferometry is used to measure displacements of optically trapped samples with very high spatial and temporal resolution. However, the technique is closely related to a method that measures the rate of change in light momentum. It has long been known that displacements of the interference pattern at the back focal plane may be used to track the optical force directly, provided that a considerable fraction of the light is effectively monitored. Nonetheless, the practical application of this idea has been limited to counter-propagating, low-aperture beams where the accurate momentum measurements are possible. Here, we experimentally show that the connection can be extended to single-beam optical traps. In particular, we show that, in a gradient trap, the calibration product κ·β (where κ is the trap stiffness and 1/β is the position sensitivity) corresponds to the factor that converts detector signals into momentum changes; this factor is uniquely determined by three construction features of the detection instrument and does not depend, therefore, on the specific conditions of the experiment. Then, we find that force measurements obtained from back-focal-plane displacements are in practice not restricted to a linear relationship with position and hence they can be extended outside that regime. Finally, and more importantly, we show that these properties are still recognizable even when the system is not fully optimized for light collection. These results should enable a more general use of back-focal-plane interferometry whenever the ultimate goal is the measurement of the forces exerted by an optical trap.
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Résumé -Caractéristiques architecturales des génomes bactériens et leurs applications Les bactéries possèdent généralement un seul chromosome circulaire. A chaque génération, ce chromosome est répliqué bidirectionnellement, par deux complexes enzymatiques de réplication se déplaçant en sens opposé depuis l'origine de réplication jusqu'au terminus, situé à l'opposé. Ce mode de réplication régit l'architecture du chromosome -l'orientation des gènes par rapport à la réplication, notamment - et est en grande partie à l'origine des pressions qui provoquent la variation de la composition en nucléotides du génome, hors des contraintes liées à la structure et à la fonction des protéines codées sur le chromosome. Le but de cette thèse est de contribuer à quantifier les effets de la réplication sur l'architecture chromosomique, en s'intéressant notamment aux gènes des ARN ribosomiques, cruciaux pour la bactérie. D'un autre côté, cette architecture est spécifique à l'espèce et donne ainsi une «identité génomique » aux gènes. Il est démontré ici qu'il est possible d'utiliser des marqueurs «naïfs » de cette identité pour détecter, notamment dans le génome du staphylocoque doré, des îlots de pathogénicité, qui concentrent un grand nombre de facteurs de virulence de la bactérie. Ces îlots de pathogénicité sont mobiles, et peuvent passer d'une bactérie à une autre, mais conservent durant un certain temps l'identité génomique de leur hôte précédent, ce qui permet de les reconnaître dans leur nouvel hôte. Ces méthodes simples, rapides et fiables seront de la plus haute importance lorsque le séquençage des génomes entiers sera rapide et disponible à très faible coût. Il sera alors possible d'analyser instantanément les déterminants pathogéniques et de résistance aux antibiotiques des agents pathogènes. Summary The bacterial genome is a highly organized structure, which may be referred to as the genome architecture, and is mainly directed by DNA replication. This thesis provides significant insights in the comprehension of the forces that shape bacterial chromosomes, different in each genome and contributing to confer them an identity. First, it shows the importance of the replication in directing the orientation of prokaryotic ribosomal RNAs, and how it shapes their nucleotide composition in a tax on-specific manner. Second, it highlights the pressure acting on the orientation of the genes in general, a majority of which are transcribed in the same direction as replication. Consequently, apparent infra-arm genome rearrangements, involving an exchange of the leading/lagging strands and shown to reduce growth rate, are very likely artifacts due to an incorrect contig assembly. Third, it shows that this genomic identity can be used to detect foreign parts in genomes, by establishing this identity for a given host and identifying the regions that deviate from it. This property is notably illustrated with Staphylococcus aureus: known pathogenicity islands and phages, and putative ancient pathogenicity islands concentrating many known pathogenicity-related genes are highlighted; the analysis also detects, incidentally, proteins responsible for the adhesion of S. aureus to the hosts' cells. In conclusion, the study of nucleotide composition of bacterial genomes provides the opportunity to better understand the genome-level pressures that shape DNA sequences, and to identify genes and regions potentially related to pathogenicity with fast, simple and reliable methods. This will be of crucial importance when whole-genome sequencing will be a rapid, inexpensive and routine tool.
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Although numerous positron emission tomography (PET) studies with (18) F-fluoro-deoxyglucose (FDG) have reported quantitative results on cerebral glucose kinetics and consumption, there is a large variation between the absolute values found in the literature. One of the underlying causes is the inconsistent use of the lumped constants (LCs), the derivation of which is often based on multiple assumptions that render absolute numbers imprecise and errors hard to quantify. We combined a kinetic FDG-PET study with magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) of glucose dynamics in Sprague-Dawley rats to obtain a more comprehensive view of brain glucose kinetics and determine a reliable value for the LC under isoflurane anaesthesia. Maps of Tmax /CMRglc derived from MRSI data and Tmax determined from PET kinetic modelling allowed to obtain an LC-independent CMRglc . The LC was estimated to range from 0.33 ± 0.07 in retrosplenial cortex to 0.44 ± 0.05 in hippocampus, yielding CMRglc between 62 ± 14 and 54 ± 11 μmol/min/100 g, respectively. These newly determined LCs for four distinct areas in the rat brain under isoflurane anaesthesia provide means of comparing the growing amount of FDG-PET data available from translational studies.
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Collection : Collection des auteurs latins
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[Acte royal. 1607-1885]
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The estimation of muscle forces in musculoskeletal shoulder models is still controversial. Two different methods are widely used to solve the indeterminacy of the system: electromyography (EMG)-based methods and stress-based methods. The goal of this work was to evaluate the influence of these two methods on the prediction of muscle forces, glenohumeral load and joint stability after total shoulder arthroplasty. An EMG-based and a stress-based method were implemented into the same musculoskeletal shoulder model. The model replicated the glenohumeral joint after total shoulder arthroplasty. It contained the scapula, the humerus, the joint prosthesis, the rotator cuff muscles supraspinatus, subscapularis and infraspinatus and the middle, anterior and posterior deltoid muscles. A movement of abduction was simulated in the plane of the scapula. The EMG-based method replicated muscular activity of experimentally measured EMG. The stress-based method minimised a cost function based on muscle stresses. We compared muscle forces, joint reaction force, articular contact pressure and translation of the humeral head. The stress-based method predicted a lower force of the rotator cuff muscles. This was partly counter-balanced by a higher force of the middle part of the deltoid muscle. As a consequence, the stress-based method predicted a lower joint load (16% reduced) and a higher superior-inferior translation of the humeral head (increased by 1.2 mm). The EMG-based method has the advantage of replicating the observed cocontraction of stabilising muscles of the rotator cuff. This method is, however, limited to available EMG measurements. The stress-based method has thus an advantage of flexibility, but may overestimate glenohumeral subluxation.
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Comprend : Conservation des documents